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Web Users Judge Sites Instantly

Ant writes "This Nature.com news article reports that potential readers can make snap decisions in just 50 milliseconds: 'Like the look of our website? Whatever the answer, the chances are you made your mind up within the first twentieth of a second. A study by researchers in Canada has shown that the snap decisions Internet users make about the quality of a web page have a lasting impact on their opinions...'"

13 of 223 comments (clear)

  1. That's Crap by Cobralisk · · Score: 5, Funny

    This article is obviously rubbish

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  2. Duh by Lord_Dweomer · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Well, let me be the first to say "Duh, of course we do."

    Having all this information at our fingertips is awe-inspiring, yet completely useless if we can't sort through it properly. That's why companies like Google and datamining companies make so much money.

    As society and people evolve to adapt to the new technology, we build our "defenses" against bad information. We have so much to go through that unless we are able to filter out bad information that quickly, we'll never get anywhere. Not to mention the fact that in this day and age of spyware/adware, plagiarism, virii and big brother everybody needs to learn what information to avoid.

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  3. "Like the look of our website?" by strobexii · · Score: 5, Funny

    It hasn't stopped us from visiting Slashdot. Over and over and over again...

  4. Funny... by versiondub · · Score: 5, Funny

    I thought playboy.com was drivel when I was a young lad...but over the course of about 5 years, that all changed.

    1. Re:Funny... by gangien · · Score: 5, Informative

      as a funny offtopic info. apparently playboy mirrors files for eclipse, apache, freebsd, and some other stuff! coolness. I fuond this out in some other article clicking around. look for yourself

  5. Navigations and ads by AuMatar · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think these are the two big determiners- if the first thing I see are 20 banner ads, I'm looking elsewhere. If I can't easily see how to get to the data I want, I'm looking elsewhere. These are easy to tell very quickly (ads on 1 glance, navigation by looking for a left column or top navigation bar). Most sites that have people leave that quickly fail one of these 2 tests, I think.

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    1. Re:Navigations and ads by bit01 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Another big determiner for me, on major sites anyway, is time-to-load. I'll frequently abort a page before it's even finished if I'm not reading something else.

      A long time-to-load probably means a badly configured server, or graphics heavy and often content free site. If a graphics rich site like BBC news can get it right, why can't anybody else?

      Incidentally, 50ms can't be right - very few web sites take less than that to load.

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    2. Re:Navigations and ads by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting
      Incidentally, 50ms can't be right - very few web sites take less than that to load.

      Yes, and if you read the article, it's clear that the study does not show what it claims to:

      Even though the images flashed up for just 50 milliseconds, roughly the duration of a single frame of standard television footage, their verdicts tallied well with judgements made after a longer period of scrutiny.

      But there is a major flaw. When the image is gone, the participants don't automatically stop making judgements about it.

      50 ms (a.k.a. three refreshes at 60 Hz) is long enough for a person to see something and remember basically what it looks like. In fact, your mind will continue to perceive the image well after the display has gone away. This phenomenon is part of what used to be called 'persistence of vision'.

      So when the experimenters ask the subject a few seconds later what their impression was, and the subject takes a second or two to indicate a preference, this is not necessarily a 50 ms snap judgement. There are whole seconds during which the image was probably being thought about.

      Now, it may be possible that a snap judgement really can be made in 50 ms. But this study does nothing to prove that.
  6. Oh Dear by HotmanParisHiltonKam · · Score: 5, Informative

    Quoth TFA "Even though the images flashed up for just 50 milliseconds, roughly the duration of a single frame of standard television footage, their verdicts tallied well with judgements made after a longer period of scrutiny."

    The human reaction time is about .25 seconds. This study erronseously assumes that the judgement is made during the time the image is displayed - of course, the image retention time on the eye end the lasting photographic imprint on the memory means that the judgement can happen well after the image is gone.

  7. In other news: by humungusfungus · · Score: 5, Funny

    "Man judges book by cover"

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  8. Re:Wrong word choice by foandd · · Score: 5, Funny

    Excellent... now look up "pedant."

  9. Web Site Peeves by queenb**ch · · Score: 5, Interesting

    50 milliseconds huh?

    Here's my list of things that almost guarantee that I'll leave your site behind, never to look back.

    1 - Music - Your taste in music is not mine. Your music sucks!
    2 - Pages that don't load - It's usually the page that looks like it has exactly what you were searching for too!
    3 - Pages that don't contain the information "as advertised" - you know the ones...you click on a link and it goes to some search page that tries to reset your home page.
    4 - Pages that are more banner ad than web page - Get over it. No one wants to see that much advertising.
    5 - Anything that blinks - Thank god the W3C deprecated the blink tag
    6 - Anything that demands I install a plug-in for "the user experience" - espeically those stupid cursors
    7 - Anything that spawns pop ads
    8 - Anything that doesn't present easy to read and use navigation (www.thetrueagency.com/true.html is a prime example of this)
    9 - Anything that doesn't have a sufficient amount of contrast between the text and the background.
    10 - Anything that uses more than 5 different fonts on the same page - Its a web site, not a comic book.
    11 - Sites that redirect to another redirect - We get the idea that you move - a lot.
    12 - Anything that uses more than 6 colors on the same page - It looks like a circus barfed on your page.

    2 cents,

    Queen B

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  10. yeah right... by Striver · · Score: 5, Funny

    So you are trying to tell us you just read playboy.com for the mirror files...

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